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    How to provide life support for a child

    Consumer Reports News: March 16, 2010 05:08 AM

    If a child stops breathing, and their heart stops beating, you need to act fast. Every cell in the body needs oxygen to survive, and if the blood stops bringing fresh oxygen, the cells begin to die. That can quickly lead to brain damage and death.

    Chest compressions and rescue breaths can make the difference between life and death for a child who has stopped breathing. So every parent should know how to provide life support for a child, until the emergency medical services arrive.

    This is what the American Heart Association's guidelines recommend:

    • Check the child for movement and response to your voice.
    • If the child isn't moving or responding, call for help and start life support. If possible, get someone else to call 911.
    • Ensure the child is lying face up on a hard surface. Check their mouth and throat are not blocked. Tilt their head backward slightly and lift their chin.
    • Cover the child's mouth with your mouth, pinch their nostrils closed, and breathe into their mouth, enough to make the chest rise. Give two rescue breaths like this, then start chest compressions.
    • Give 30 chest compressions, pressing quite hard and fast on the lower part of the breast-bone (the sternum). Allow the chest to spring back before starting each compression.
    • Give two more breaths. If you are alone, do this whole cycle three times, before stopping to call 911. If someone else is calling 911, try to continue until help arrives or the child begins to move.
    • If there are two of you giving life support, you can do cycles of 15 chest compressions followed by two breaths, instead of 30 compressions.

    See the full Health blog post.


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